The Vinita Daily Chieftain. (Vinita, Indian Terr.), Vol. 5, No. 300, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 29, 1903 Page: 4 of 4
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MIAMI'.
TMr1 MnmSny in X
inl Mul day iij Mar
NuffATA:-
i c.irtli M.in.tnv In NoveiMn.r
l ourth M.imlay tu i'i-tmary.
PUVOU hi I ii:
Klrsi Moiiiiav in lie cefiihur
fecund Muailij ii Mari:U
SAtUSAW:-
Sfi-nnfl M. unlay In Dfcerubur
third M.mJay April .
CLMiEMOUE;
First Monday t ri January
First Monday la April.
Usedfor Pneumonia
Dr. C. J. Bishop of Agnew Mich.
says "I liave used Foley's Honey and
Tar in tbree very severe casts of pneu-
monia with good results in every case"
Refuse substitutes. Sold by Shanaban
& Mitchell. dw
Remember that on Wednesday
evening at the opera house the
ladies of the Baptist church are
going to give a musical
tainment. and dont fail
enter-
to at-
tend.
PROGRAMME.
Trio Violin Cornet and Piano
Miss Graper Messrs. Grant & Caldwell.
Vodl Solo Janie Dear Bisowjf
Miss Mayuard.
Violin Solo Selected from II Trovatore
Miss Phillips.
Instrumental Solo By The Brookslde
Orlh
Miss Kibbler
Reading Ben llur Chariot Race.
. Lew Wallace
Mrs. John Miller Drake.
Violin So'.o Traumerie and Romance
Shumann
Mr. Caldwell.
VnrAl Solo Fare The Well II Trova
tore Vcrdi
Miss Maynard.
Instrumental Solo Polka deConceite
.liar I Mi
Miss Graper.
Vocal Solo -For the Sake of the Past
....Mailer.
Miss Kibbler.
Sale of Intruder farm.
I will sell on Saturday Oct 31 1903
at Claremore. I. T. between tbe
hours of 1 and 4 o'ceock p. ui. tbe fol
lowing intruder place located Id
townshio 28 rante 20 north west
quarter Sec. 5 known as the Master
E. Butler place. Houses fences
stables etc. 7 or 8 miles northwest
ofVitiit. J. II. Giody. airent for
sale of Intruder places Coeeacoo
wee cli-t.ric. w
Mothers Congress.
There will be a mothers meeting at
the rebidji.ee of t lie Rev. P. H. lllcks
Wednesday aftcruonu at 3 o'clock.
All tbe ladle- or i hecli y are cordially
invite ! to attend
Will Buy Your Apples.
I want to jjuieliase all the market-
able winter apple In. the country.
Will barrel irotn tbe orchard or buy
from wagons in Viuita. Will receive
them here one day in each week.
d95-Q 4-5 J. A. Yeamut..
SHARKS FOR SOUP.
Terror of the Sea to De Turned t.
Account in a Commer-
cial War.
Commerce proposes now to convert
the sharks of the Bay of San Juan del
Norte in Nicaragua into factory
products says a late report.
Americans have been led by tha
vast number and size of the sharks
down there and the case of catching
them into studying possible uses fo
tbe monsters and they find that there
is a lot of money in sharks. Indeed
there is hardly a part of the brute
that cannot be utilized for something.
Shark fins furnish a Jelly that
makes a deliciouu soup. There is an
excellent market for it wherever there
are Chinese and if it were once of-
ferer" as an American product it might
not be long before Americans and oth-
would relish it aa much as the
Chine.se do now.
The livers of the sharks produce a
clear oil that is very valuable being
in great demand for watches clocks
and fine guns. It is held in almost a?
much estimation as the oil obtained
from porpoise and dogfish liver which
is the finest animal oil there Is.
The skin of sharks Is of a beautiful
burnished gray or bluish color. It
looks like finely grained leather be
cause it is full of tiny prickles all set
one way. Under tie name of sha-
green It has a variety of uses.
Even the lmr.es of sharks are useful.
The backbone is in constant demand
by walking enne manufacturers. Tbe
teeth end jawbones are salable to col-
I tors and tourists.
When the American b''-'!ne?s man
u
1 r thr- s-1
in the Hay of
Juan
in 1
del No
t h- re will be rtis
p i-h -world for
'.' . ft tbe r::on-ter.--fti.'d
for centuries.
be t:
! 1 3 '
It
Of
vid ti
own
:- --e I
i ii
. ra
to
! ! ev.
t!
.'t V.
tire)
-j V
niU -'
kt !.:
0e i ! (irntnl Ilritiiclien of Sit-
H ii r MT It'L of ve.Iti
Time.
The fotiiiiii-r- of the army ambulance
ti.-l in durii.j; the civil tir was Dr.
i .ry i . liowdmh of lloj ton.
hi "Life and CVrre.-n-nrnes ed
tU-d l J is son the y'.ry in told of how
this man of pi . -tee promoted one of tte
greatest oniibua-ures of our time.
Dr. liovwiiuh hud been to the front
early in the ..ar. ar.d hid n-ea the
brutality and. carelessness 1 rem v hich
the wounded soldiers mifered tonie-
t'.mes more than from 1 He dang-ers of
battle. He discovered that the ambu-
lance drivers were a miserable set of
men. When he returned to lies ton he
appealed to the Society for Medical
Improvement ar:d was supported by
the Boston Medical and Surgical Jour-
sal. Tl.e matter of an organized ambu-
lance system was laid before congress.
To Dr. Bowditch's dismay when the
bill hr-d passed the house and went
to the t.enate in February 103 Henry
Wilson senator from Massachusetts
opposed the measure as the notion of
an unpractical enthusiast. Worse
still Charles Sumner who as a fel-
low abolitionist wan. Dr. llowdi ten's
friend kept silence and allowed the
measure to be defeated.
Dr. Bow-ditch meanwhile took ever
opportunity to preach to the grndu
atiri students of the Harvard medical
school their dutv if they went to the
front to do all they could for maimed
and dying- soldiers.
In the midst of his wor Ms own
son was fatxilly wounded at. Kellv'n
Ford. The word came onlv three
weeks after Wilson bad crushed the
bill. Doubly st'.rred. Dr. Bowdltch pub
lished a "Brief Plea for an Ambulance
System."
Senator Wilson thereupon offered to
Introduce a bill for nn amtnlanee de-
partment of men drilled to take care
of the wounded. Bow ditch s work w as
accomplished and he always felt that
the death of his son had b( en a bugle
call rousir.tr him to effort after tit
first defeat.
Doctors Could Not Help Her
"I had kidney trouble for years
writes Mrs. Raymond Connor of Shelton
Wash. "and the doctors could not help
me. I tried Foley's Kidney Cure and
the very first dose gave me relief and I
am now cured I cannot'say too much
for Foley's Kidney Cure." Sold by
Shanaban & Mitchell. dw
Now is the time to buy a Kod Moon
Bros' bumjy. Lee Barrett Is selling
tbera at cost. Gall and see them be-
fore buying for they have nice finish
and are up-to-date and the price Is
rU'bt. Now for a bargain. if
BROTHERS AS CHAPERONS.
Not in Genernl Favor Yet Thejr Are
the llmt Possible fare-Taker
of Sinter.
A chaperon Is a luxury not within
the reach of all'g'rla and the only real
substitute of value is a brother. But
when a brother accepts this most use
ful office he is looked upon as a "make-
shift" and as a person undesirable and
incompetent. Therefore a mother
would take pains to secure for her
daughter the companionship of ajniost
any one of her own sex rather than a
brother says the Chicago American.
This is a gToss injustice to brothers.
Any girl who has been chaperoned by
her brother will tell you that he Is the
best possible person for the office. Any
man who has enjoyed the society of a
young lady under the chape.ronage of
her brother will say the same. Broth-
ers who have acted as chaperons say
that a man takes to the work quite nat-
urally and with plenty of confidence.
In addition to this evidence it is com-
mon knowledge that the lady chaperon
dislikes her office is disliked by the
young lady she chaperons and by the
men who would know the young lady.
A man is liked best as a chaperon be-
cause he is broad-minded and generous.
He doesn't want to lead his sister lntc
the most crowded parts of the flower
show and talk Inanities to old bores; he
doesn't reprove her if she dares to say
Fomethlng funny. He doesn't preserve a
countenance of prim severity and pose
as the goddess of propriety. Neither
does he take his sister into the company
of undesirable men as lady chaperons
often do; he gives such persons a wide
berth and introduces his little sister
only to those men who arp -ood honest
whole-hearted fellows.
The brother chaperon can give his sis
ter much advice that win lie or more
i;?e to her than etiquette books. He can
point out the men t-lie should not know
and he can unhesitatingly expose their
worthlessness. He can tell her a dozen
little things that stamp the good man
as a good man and a dozen others that
mark the bad one for what he Is.
Thre Is no fear of a broihr hading
his rlstrr Into Indiscretions. That !!
'h last thing he would do. He fakes
t the rnrne time a lively Interest In a
love affair e.rd roes his best to leave th.
nurs couple alone together for five
mi'Jines at ir.rervais. i
The bro'her ch.irmron is rsre. because
the only on- avnlWe Is he who bs a
rrentcr fodr.es for his own sis'er tbar
f-T -rr!xdv else's.
CHOUP.
Usual! j beinjiwith the sympt ms of
a common cold; there is chilliness
stieezinj sore tin oat hot ktn quick
ptibe lie ir--e'ie-s ?n 1 iuipe led resnira
Uon. Give frequent Miiail doses of Bal-
lard's Horel.ounil Syrttp (the e'.iM
will cry for it) ami at tbe first s'gn of
a cr TV C'UL-a. arr.v irenueiil.v i.ai-
-r.y
l'
n
Liniment external to the
cert at People's Drug
dw
ul't Xot J. fine Utile
ctif i:ie!uiiie t are
of ; i-l-.
to
When engaging a am the mother
should bo able to Judg.e of c nain quali-
fications quite apart lrom the purely pro-
ii-aiuiiiu niiso. iliLie ure liiany Bo-
called "minor points" that are really of
much importance. The nurse ghould be
a really tidyi;rcbcntable pcrsion aa dia-
tinguished from the nurse who makes
herself bo for the occasion of seeking
employment. She should have a clear.
healthy complexion and an amiable dis-
position. Children retain early impres-
sions; hence the individual who controls
their early life should be Instinctively
refined and fairly educated says the
American Queen.
Unreliable nurses often give babies
soothing draughts to keep them quiet
and unless the parent Is very watch-
ful this sort of criminal treatment for
it Is criminal may continue to the per-
manent injury of the child. No such
thing should ever be given without the
knowledge of the parent and a nurse
should be made to understand that any
Infringement of this rule would result
in her Immediate discharge.
No mother should leave her baby to
the exclusive charge of the nurse no
matter what the former's responsibili-
ties and engagements may be. She
should make a dailyVisit to the nursery
to see that the child is being properly
cared for. The nurse who objects to fre-
quent and unannounced visits should
have a watch set upon her movements
for if she is performing her duties she
will not object to Inspection at any
time.
There should be impressed upon the
nurse the great evil of exciting a baby.
This is frequently done to amuse it or
to "bring out its intelligence." It has
however just the opposite effect and
noises jingling bells whistling and call-
ing in its ears besides all other forms
of excitement sow seeds for future nerv-
ous disorders.
Feet Swollen to Immense Size
"I had kidney trouble so bad that I
could not work" says J. J. Cox of Val-
ley View Ky. "my feet were swollen
to immense size and I was confined to
my bed and physicians were unable to
give me any relief. My doctor finally
prescribed Foley's Kidney Cure which
made a well man of me. Sold by Shan-
aban & Mitchell. d
DOES THE WHALE SLEEP?
A UucHtlon I'pon 'Which Students of
.Natural Hintory Are Sot Yet
Decided.
It is a common belief among both
whalers and naturalists says Knowl-
edge that when whales "sound" they
descend to enormous depths in the
ocean. Dr. W Kuekeuthal estimates
for instance that the larger members of
the group commonly dive to a depth
of fully a thousand yards although the
evidence on which this rests is not given.
In a memoir recently published in Bel-
gium Dr. Racovltza challenges this be-
lief and states that in his opinion 100
yards is the maximum depth to which
any whalo can dive and that many spe-
cies cannot reach anything like that
limit. He very pertinently asks why
should whales want to go to such depths.
All whales sound for the purpose of
obtaining food and in the profound
darkness of 1000 yards what food could
they get? Those species which feed on
animalcules might perhaps obtain what
they want.
But how about the species which feed
on fishes and cuttles? At a depth of a
thousand yards they certainly could not
use the-ir eyes to detect non-luminous
species and we have no evidence what-
ever that they feed on the self-luminous
deep sea fish and cuttles (if; Indeed there
be any of the latter). On the contrary
the available evidence indicates that
they feed on ordinary light-dwelling
fishes and cuttles which live in much
shallower zones.
But this is not all. It is known that
the effects of a pressure of more than
three atmospheres proves fatal to hu-
man life and although we may believe
that whales can stand treble this pres-
sure or nine atmospheres which would
occur at about 90 yards depth is It con-
ceivable that they could resist the ef-
fen of ten times the latter pressure or
90 atmospheres? Moreover does it seem
possible that a whale whose body Is only
slight'iv heavier than water at ordinary
pressure could exert the muscular force
necessary to propel that body to a depth
of a thousand yards?
Whether the author has so strong a
case In bis contention that whales never
slerp demands furt'ter consideration.
One of the arguments In favor cf the
constant wakefulness of cetaceans Is
that Individuals will follow a ship for
days which they could not well do while
asleep. Anotner is that wnaies except.
occasionally a right whale or a sperm
wfcale are not found floating motion-
less on the surface and reasons are given
aealnst the thpory that they Fleep at tho
bottom. But. it may be urged. If whales
never sleep they must have food at
night and be able to catch it and
what then becomfs of the argument
that they cannot capture prey In the
dark ocean abysses? Moreover It Is
difficult to Imagine that an animal with
such a highly orcanlzc-d brain as a whale
can exist permanently without sler ping.
fepvial!y when we remember that fihhe
VifeO-
Cured Hemorrhages of the Lungs.
".Severa1 ' years since my longs were
so ba ll ! effected that I had many hem-
orrhage" writes A. M. Ake. of Wood
Ind "I took treatment lth several
physicians without any bent fit I then
started to take Foley's Honey and Tar
gt.d my lungs are cow as sound as a bul-
let. I recommend it in advance 1 singet
of lung troul
..-ht-'.
ie.
& by S'
lanalian ft
1 !
Tlie Store
21 Years a Dyspeptic.
R. H. Foster 318 S. 2d. St. Salt Lake
City writes; "I. have been bothered
with dyspepsia or indigestion for 21
years; tried many doctors without relief
recently I got a bottle of Ilerbine. One
bottle cured me I am now taperiug off
on the second I have recommended it
to my friends; it is curing-them too.'
50 cents at People's drug store." dw
You press the button and the
Eastman takes tbe pioture. Posu.fllce
Book store. dtf
To Cure a Cold in One Day
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tab
ets. This signature
on every box 25c
Cm 1 Sale
Calves
If : Desired.
To Sxxit-
John Franklin
Estella Indian Territory.
is via the
Descriptive literature cor.cernir.
this delightful rtscjrt furni!. -i!
upon appication to i
Passenger Trcffic Lcpari tr t r t
FRISCO SYSTEM
Saint Louis
The Most Direct
Route from either north
or south to the Famous
Health Res ort and
Sr.-rinrrs of
P
GO
SlLfillJl I
r i
I I
t i
i
1
u
fivaua
A
?
fey
THE REAL THING IS
Your boys are nicely dressed and arc nearer what you think
they are when they wear Perfection.
PERFECTION CLOTHING is Hade in Cincinnati
PERFECTION CLOTHING is Sold in VINITA.
LittTe Gents' Perfection suits all wool silk sewed A Of)
best made all sizes run up from per suit VTiUU
Little Gents' Perfection Overcoats light and dark j O Cf
colors light and heavy weight up from. uj)OtuV
A large line of cheaper suits for rough and tumble wear and
rough and tumble boys good and economical per suit Qfjp
up from....:..... CUb
Boys' fleece-lined shirts and drawers 25c
Boys' fleece-lined union suits 50c
Infants' vests and pants each up from 10c
Children's union suits. .25c
LDEN
Where a Dollar Goes
The Best Meats
13ST TOTTiTTT
:Sttr.'p You can get most
"x i anything you call
If All kinds of Coun-
ff ' (5;-.c"..:! j try Produce is al-
ways wanted. We
U mijHd9 pay good prices.
Telephone 48.
I.N. Williams
j Vinita. Indian Territory.
OliiETHiG
TRY OUR
ffinr nnrccivrr
j 1 1
WE SELL
GfJIYTHc BEST
-J
it costs about half a mticb for sluningas the origin al r-rico c f
the'shoes. WJiy not ?ave this expense and tliu.s reduce the cv-t.
cf your 'hoes by buying at Wright's Hlioo Store? We run a f:r-t
class shining chair and our customers are at libertv to dn -n in
and got shinrd at their
V'ours for Hiorli-Grade
THE WRIGHT
H 1
j ! f t
r i
i t ;
S t j
Hi
; j j j j
L L u
m Tf ii
f
the Farthest
FOR NOTHING
AT-
WRIGHT
....SHOE....
COn PA NY'S
How mucli dots the av-
erage man who buys
high-grade s
iOt-S SfM-Iid
for
slimes
A constTva-
e fri:k of chakgi:.
Footwear-
SHOE COMPANY.
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Marrs, D. M. The Vinita Daily Chieftain. (Vinita, Indian Terr.), Vol. 5, No. 300, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 29, 1903, newspaper, September 29, 1903; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc775060/m1/4/: accessed April 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.